Revision of Collection from Fri, 2009-09-25 12:49

Sampling Equipment

  • bucket
  • cups
  • spoon
  • long knife
  • refractometer
  • waterproof marker
  • sampling site description sheet
  • pencil
  • camera
  • GPS
  • camera
  • scoop

General Advice

Take Picture of  every sample. It will make it a lot easier to locate the sample location in case you want to return. In order to identifiy the sample on the picture write the sample number clearly on the lid of the cup.

General Sand Sample


Pete Samples

A 'Pete Sample' as a long, thin surface sample covering a gradient of different substrates or habitats (the name is in honour of Peter Ladurner, who 'invented' that type of sample). 

Transects

Several Pete samples can be combined into long transects.

Scoop

To sample in between vegetation, especially in fresh water habitats, a scooping sampling device can be very helpfull to collect and concentrate the material. This one was built by Gregor Schulte out of a discarded detergent container found on the beach, a 30 µm mesh and a lid of a urine cup. It's really an indispensable collection tool.



Scooping was also very successfully used on a flooded meadows.   

Building instructions for such scoops will follow.

Core Sample

Core Sample

These kinds of acrylic tubes are useful to take core samples in a more standardised way.

Traps

Untill now just an idea. Traps could be put out in the field and then collected afterwards. Any progress will be reported here. 

Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith